The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Oil could hit US$60 before year-end: Barron’s, citing Citi analyst

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ACCELERATI­NG world oil demand and reduced supply from the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) could push crude prices up to US$60 a barrel before the end of the year, according to a report from Barron’s.

The report cites research from Citigroup senior energy analyst Eric Lee, who previously called for a bear market in oil when the price was above US$100.

The decline in recent weeks to a low of just over US$44 for Brent crude LCOc1, the internatio­nal benchmark, has made Lee a short-term bull, Barron’s notes.

Lee projects demand of 97.3 million barrels a day in 2017, a record high, up from 96 million in 2016, driven largely by emerging market countries such as China and India.

Simultaneo­usly, reduction in supply from OPEC of about 0.7 million barrels a day versus the 2016 average should drive the price up before the end of the fourth quarter.

A decline in global oil inventorie­s began after the first quarter, and Lee projects that it will continue at an accelerate­d rate through the end of this year.

Oil prices settled nearly 3 percent lower on Friday as rising US production and an increase in OPEC exports to a 2017 high cast doubt on efforts by producers to curb a persistent glut.

On Friday Reuters data showed that OPEC production is now at the highest level of the year.

Matt Smith, director of commodity research at Clipperdat­a, said OPEC exports were 2 million barrels per day (bpd) higher last month than in June 2016, despite the extension of OPEC’s 1.8 million bpd production cut.

Lee notes that oil speculator­s ignored details of OPEC’s agreement, which ordered cuts to begin at the end of 2016 rather than when the accord was announced.

That allowed participan­ts to ramp up production during negotiatio­ns, which meant the cuts were struck from a higher base.

As for supply from the United States, Lee says continued pumping by producers will keep prices from skyrocketi­ng back towards US$100 a barrel, but their presence is unlikely to prevent an upward move in oil for the remainder of the year.

Following the jump to US$60 Lee expects prices to remain flat heading into 2018, as the supply side catches up with demand.

Barring major political disruption­s from petroleum-producing nations, he expects the price of crude probably will not rise much above US$60. — Reuters

 ?? - Reuters photo ?? Simultaneo­usly, reduction in supply from OPEC of about 0.7 million barrels a day versus the 2016 average should drive the price up before the end of the fourth quarter.
- Reuters photo Simultaneo­usly, reduction in supply from OPEC of about 0.7 million barrels a day versus the 2016 average should drive the price up before the end of the fourth quarter.

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